Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Teacher In Indonesian Prison Showing 'Great Resilience': Wife Says

The Canadian Press, 07 Mar, 2016 10:43 AM
    TORONTO — The family of a Canadian teacher convicted of sexually abusing children in Indonesia says they are worried squalid prison conditions could threaten his health.
     
    Neil Bantleman's family issued a statement on how the Ontario man has been faring since an Indonesian court overturned his acquittal last month.
     
    Bantleman's wife Tracy says she can visit her husband for up to two hours every day and bring food and other basic supplies to him.
     
    She says Bantleman is showing "great resilience" but notes the conditions inside the prison are deplorable and she fears his health could "easily deteriorate rapidly."
     
    Bantleman and an Indonesian teaching assistant have maintained their innocence since they were accused of sexually abusing three children at a prestigious international school in the capital Jakarta.
     
    Indonesia's High Court overturned their convictions last August, but prosecutors appealed to the country's supreme court which overruled the lower court last month and added an extra year to the pair's original 10 year prison sentences.
     
    Bantleman's family is continuing to press the Canadian government to apply pressure on Indonesia, meeting with the Parliamentary Secretary for Global Affairs in Mississauga, Ont. last week.
     
    Bantleman's brother Guy says Omar Alghabra assured him the government is working at the "highest levels" to ensure a resolution to the case.
     
    Guy Bantleman says Neil Bantleman's mother gave a hand-written letter to Alghabra to deliver to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking him to find a way to bring her son home.
     
    Bantleman says he is travelling to Ottawa later this week for more meetings with federal officials to discuss his brother's plight.
     
    He also says his brother's lawyers are waiting for a written decision from the Supreme Court so they can prepare a judicial review of the case.
     
    Canada's ambassador to Indonesia visited Bantleman in prison last Monday and told him the Canadian government is doing everything it can to bring him home.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Majority Of Quebec Schools Closed As Teachers, Public Sector Workers Off The Job

    Majority Of Quebec Schools Closed As Teachers, Public Sector Workers Off The Job
    MONTREAL — More than 400,000 government workers are off the job today across Quebec, including teachers, health-care workers and civil servants.

    Majority Of Quebec Schools Closed As Teachers, Public Sector Workers Off The Job

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto
    Several animal rights groups are planning to protest the African Hunting Events show at a suburban Holiday Inn in mid-January.

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    OTTAWA — The federal government may want to consider targeted steps to "lean against" the shift toward significantly bigger mortgages, a new report by the C.D. Howe Institute suggests.

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    A Federal Court claim filed by Canadian Tire alleges that Wal-Mart worked with two Taiwanese companies to copy the construction and packaging of its Noma Quick-Clip lights.

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds
    The 2015 survey found that 29 per cent of 12th-graders reported engaging in hazardous drinking, and more than a quarter of adolescents said they were allowed to imbibe at home with friends.

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried
    LOS ANGELES — A team of veterinarians, scientists and lab workers gathered around a surrogate hound and watched her give birth to seven half-pound puppies, the first dogs ever conceived in a test tube.

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried